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Handbook on Migration and Human Rights

Edited by: Ruth Rubio MarĂ­n, Dorothy Estrada-Tanck, Benedita Menezes Queiroz, Fulvia Staiano

ISBN13: 9781035302246
To be Published: September 2025
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £200.00



This Research Handbook examines the complex issues faced by migrants and refugees in securing their human rights. By challenging and reformulating the crisis narrative often perpetuated by states and international organizations, it provides a cutting-edge, in-depth investigation of key themes central to the human rights implications of migration.

Adopting an intersectional, interdisciplinary and gendered approach, the Research Handbook identifies the human rights challenges faced by migrants and refugees, especially women, girls and LGBTIQ+ persons, as well as the complex questions faced by states and supranational institutions in addressing diversity and managing human mobility. It considers socio-economic, health, and environmental crises, such as climate change-induced displacement, through a critical lens to determine the impact of these issues on the lives of migrants. The Handbook includes an analysis of global and local solutions to the fragilities of migration and refugee protection regimes, including those expressed by migrants themselves. Ultimately, it argues that the ‘migration crisis’ rhetoric is inaccurate, and that states’ efforts ought to be directed at offering durable solutions to structural challenges ensuring respect of human rights for all.

The Handbook on Migration and Human Rights is an essential resource for students and academics in international relations, migration, human rights and refugee law. Policymakers, UN and regional human rights bodies, and legal practitioners will greatly benefit from its unique insights into global and local governance.

Subjects:
Human Rights and Civil Liberties, Immigration, Asylum, Refugee and Nationality Law
Contents:
1. Introduction to the Handbook on Migration and Human Rights 1'
Ruth Rubio Marín, Dorothy Estrada-Tanck, Benedita Menezes Queiroz and Fulvia Staiano

PART I CONFLICT, GOVERNANCE AND RULE OF LAW'
2. A crisis of human rights: litigation as governance at the border 13'
Jaya Ramji-Nogales'
3. Protracted conflicts and the protection of women in refugee law 32'
Christel Querton'
4. A holistic approach to human mobility: the Model International Mobility Convention 52'
Michael Doyle and Dorothea Koehn'
5. The International Rule of Law Necropower’s use of human rights discourses in new asylum and migration laws 66'
Ariadna Estévez'
6. Security meets gender equality and women’s human rights: the securitisation of trafficking in women for sexual exploitation at EU level 81'
Lucrecia Rubio Grundell

PART II DIVERSITY MANAGEMENT'
7. Solidarity towards distress migrants: how changing frontline communities depend on states to build a new public space 97'
Jacqueline Bhabha, Vasileia Digidiki and Urszula Markowska-Manista'
8. Human trafficking in CEDAW: a global, regional and domestic analysis from the perspective of South and Southeast Asia 116'
Ramona Vijeyarasa'
9. Managing crisis: multiculturalism and the politics of exclusion 141'
Giorgia Baldi'
10. Intersectionality-driven human rights standards to protect migrant women against violence: CEDAW and the Istanbul Convention 162'
Lourdes Peroni'
11. Assessing vulnerability: fundamental rights protection in SOGI asylum claims under EU law 181'
Benedita Menezes Queiroz'
12. Gender inequity for women in migration and family law relocation contexts: systems falling short in applications to stay and leave 197'
Melany Toombs and Jiaying Goh May'
13. The paradoxes of vulnerability: women, migration and gender equality 216'
Veronica Federico

PART III SOCIO-ECONOMIC, HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS'
14. Crisis, domestic workers and socio-economic rights 238'
Vera Pavlou'
15. Transnational ‘granny-nannies’ – promoting visibility and rights for aging caregivers in transnational families 256'
Edit Frenyó'
16. The crossroads of the gender backlash and the anti-migration crisis: a view from (undocumented) migrant women’s and girls’ human rights 281'
Dorothy Estrada-Tanck'
17. Transnational mobility rights and the COVID-19 travel restrictions 296'
Timothy Jacob-Owens and Lorenzo Piccoli'
18. Climate change-induced displacement in the light of states’ duties of international protection: lessons from the past and a look to the future 312'
Fulvia Staiano'
19. A human rights-based approach to protect environmentally displaced persons 325'
Andrea Pacheco Pacifico'
20. Facing the polycrisis: human-environmental security for planet earth 348'
John Morrissey